Pakistani military says it kills 32 militants in ambush

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By Jibran Ahmad

PESHAWAR, Pakistan Fri Dec 19, 2014 7:09am EST

(Reuters) - The Pakistani army said it has killed 59 militants in clashes in the northwest, including 32 in an ambush in a remote valley near the Afghan border, in intensified fighting since this week's Taliban massacre of children at a school.

The ambush took place overnight in the northwestern Tirah valley in the Khyber agency, one of the main smuggling routes for arms and insurgents crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

"Security forces ambushed (the) moving group ... Fleeing terrorists left behind bodies of their accomplices," the military said in a statement.

There was no independent verification of the clash.

The military also said late on Thursday that 17 militants were killed in air strikes in Khyber and 10 in ground fighting.

The army is fighting offensives against Pakistani Taliban insurgents in Khyber as well as the North Waziristan region, which is also on the Afghan border.

But the pace of operations has picked up since Pakistani Taliban suicide attackers killed 131 school children, nine teachers and a soldier at a military-run high school in the northwestern city of Peshawar on Tuesday.

The assault was the deadliest militant attack ever in Pakistan. Footage of terrified children and classrooms awash with blood has provoked a wave of revulsion in a country mostly inured to daily violence.

The Pakistani Taliban, who are allied with but separate from the Afghan Taliban, said the school attack was revenge for the offensive against them and they accused the military of killing civilians in remote areas where journalists are forbidden to go.

Many Pakistani militants have sought refuge from the offensive over the border in lawless areas of Afghanistan but they have come under attack there too, especially by missile-firing U.S. drones.

In the latest such attack, two militants were killed on Friday, just over the border from the Tirah valley, an Afghan official and militants said.

Since the school attack, the government has promised that Pakistan would not discriminate between different militant factions, trying to draw a line under years of support for some groups seen as useful in Pakistan's confrontation with India and in achieving Pakistan's aims in Afghanistan.

The government has also announced that it would rescind an unofficial moratorium on the death penalty.

THINK TANK

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Why not both Pak and Afghan give away a portion of their countries for Talibans to have a State of their Own on the condition that they can indulge in all sorts of raping, marrying and killings in their own area. If need be they can put a condition to Talibans that they should not in any way interfere in their affairs on these matters

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I think the taliben people are really about themselves each one, as they left the comrades killed lying there and think guns is the answer and lose men in the process in war which they believe is holy. The government needs to, control the situation otherwise more will die in this war between talibens and military and cause more destruction. The talibens are getting arrogant, and believe no one can defeat them which will be downfall sometime later in the war.

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On the surface, it seems that the Pakistani military is finally doing something serious about the Taliban. Now to see if they keep up the momentum. From the reports I have read so far, I get the impression that Pakistani views the Taliban as some kind of ATM. Like, they use the Taliban to get military aid from the US. To wipe out the Taliban totally is an impossible task. To us who are not there, the Taliban looks like terrorists. However to the Pakistanis on the ground, the Taliban looks just like themselves. Many probably have a friend or family member who is an active member of the Taliban or a supporter.